Partial Pseudonymity of an Appellate Decision

I wonder what people think about this: M.M. v. M.S. is a nonprecedential California appellate decision from last Wednesday, involving a lawsuit about alleged invasion of privacy in medical records. (My sense from my quick research is that the medical record was a medical marijuana card.)

Now keeping a case fully pseudonymous, with the parties name unavailable in the court files, is generally viewed by our legal system as a fairly substantial step, requiring some justification—a mild form of sealing of court documents. I think California courts are more open to this than some other courts, but even so pseudonymity is the exception rather than the rule, even though civil defendants, criminal defendants, and even plaintiffs would often prefer not to have their names appear in court decisions.

But here the pseudonymity seems to be present only in the court’s opinion. The appellate and trial court dockets, which one can find using the case numbers given in the opinion, contain the parties’ full names.

Anyone who really wants to research the case can easily find the names, and can find the local newspaper story from 2017, when the lawsuit was filed. So the public’s interest in being able to monitor what courts are doing seems to be largely unimpaired; but the parties’ privacy is protected—or, if you prefer, it becomes harder for the parties’ future employers, business partners, neighbors, or lovers to learn this information by Googling for the parties’ names.

Should we like this? Dislike it?

Does the existence of the article in the local newspaper affect your analysis? Note that there was no follow-up article about the appellate decision in the local paper; I’m not sure if that’s because the newspaper hasn’t gotten to it yet, doesn’t find the appellate decision as newsworthy as the initial filing, or hasn’t learned about the case.

Note also that the plaintiff appears to have been involved as an officer in a local political organization, and the defendants were a former city councilman and a local political activist.

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‘Literally Hitler’ Election Mailer Is Protected by the First Amendment

Hitler mailer

Group wins challenge to Tennessee law against “false” speech in campaign literature. Is calling a political candidate “literally Hitler” illegal? Not in Tennessee, according to a new court ruling.

The case was brought by the nonprofit group Tennesseans for Sensible Election Laws, which created a flyer critical of state Rep. Bruce Griffey and his proposal to chemically castrate some people convicted of sex offenses against minors.

“Bruce Griffey is LITERALLY HITLER” it says at the  top and, underneath that, “Bruce Griffey: an agenda the Nazis would love.”

“You would think in 2020 we’ve moved on from Nazi-style population control, but here we are,” the flyer continues before explaining Griffey’s proposal and calling for people to “Vote NO on Bruce Griffey.”

Tennessee state law prohibits publishing or distributing “campaign literature in opposition to any candidate in an election” if any “statement charge, allegation, or other matter contained therein with respect to such candidate is false.” It makes no exceptions for satire, hyperbole, or parody.

Under the law, Tennesseans for Sensible Election Laws (TSEL) would have faced a fine and jail time for distributing the “literally Hitler” flyer. Instead, the group filed a lawsuit challenging the Tennessee law and asking for the right to distribute “satirical, parodical, and hyperbolic campaign literature.”

Last Thursday, Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle ruled in the group’s favor, finding Tennessee’s prohibition on “false speech” in election communications to be a violation of the First Amendment and the Tennessee Constitution.

The law “punishes only false political speech in opposition to candidates for elected office, while permitting false speech in support of such candidates,” noted Lyle in her decision. “Such viewpoint discrimination is incompatible with the First Amendment, and no compelling interest supports it.” More from the decision:

Second, Tennessee Code Annotated § 2-19-142 exclusively penalizes false campaign literature opposing candidates seeking elected office, while permitting all other false campaign literature and all speech regarding noncandidates. Such content-based restrictions on speech similarly contravene the First Amendment.

Third, Tennessee Code Annotated § 2-19-142’s criminalization of “false” speech cannot be reconciled with the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Alvarez, 567 U.S. 709 (2012), which held that a statement’s falsity alone is insufficient to remove it from the ambit of protection guaranteed by the First Amendment.

Fourth, Tennessee Code Annotated § 2-19-142 is unconstitutionally overbroad because it prohibits a substantial amount of constitutionally protected speech, both in an absolute sense and relative to the statute’s legitimate sweep, and because a substantial number of instances exist in which § 2-19-142 cannot be applied constitutionally.

Fifth, by restricting speech based on its content, by proscribing protected speech, and by criminalizing political speech based on viewpoint, Tennessee Code Annotated § 2-19-142 contravenes the more expansive protections of article I, section 19 of the Tennessee Constitution.

Read the full decision granting TSEL summary judgment here.

“The framers of our Constitution believed that robust public speech and debate would be essential to self-government,” said TSEL Executive Director and Treasurer George Scoville in a statement following the ruling. “This law tried to put its thumb on the scale, favoring the very people who enacted it—Tennessee state lawmakers—to the detriment of members of the voting public, who also have a reciprocal right to hear political communications and decide for themselves what matters in an election, including what is true or false.”

“Soon after the ruling on Thursday, Tennesseans for Sensible Election Laws announced plans to send the mailers comparing Griffey to Adolf Hitler,” the Nashville Tennessean reports.


FREE MINDS

Trump talks COVID-19 numbers. In a new interview with Axios reporter Jonathan Swan, President Donald Trump displayed (once again) what’s either an astoundingly abysmal understanding of charts and statistics or a willful attempt to confuse Americans about how poorly we’re doing at controlling the new coronavirus compared to other countries. See for yourself below:


FREE MARKETS

More on Microsoft, Trump, and TikTok. After threatening to ban the extremely popular Chinese-owned TikTok, then saying it was OK for Microsoft to acquire the company for U.S. users if they did so by September 15, the president spoke about the situation again at a Monday press conference, suggesting the federal government should get a cut of whatever deal may be struck.

“A very substantial portion of that price is going to have to come into the Treasury of the United States, because we’re making it possible for this deal to happen,” Trump told reporters.

“Both parts of this are incredibly disturbing: The casual assertion that Trump can unilaterally ‘shut down’ a media platform, and the implication that the government would somehow extort a payment as a condition on a business acquisition,” commented Julian Sanchez, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute who focuses on tech policy and privacy issues. “This is a laughably thin ‘national security’ pretext being invoked to abuse executive emergency authorities in order to expropriate a foreign company. If China was pulling this, we’d recognize it easily for what it was.”


ELECTION 2020

How the media might blow the election. A massive increase in mail-in voting due to the COVID-19 pandemic will mean election result delays that could drag on for weeks. That leaves a lot of time for media-driven mishaps and more, warns Ben Smith at The New York Times:

The coronavirus crisis means that states like Pennsylvania may be counting mail-in ballots for weeks, while President Trump tweets false allegations about fraud. And the last barriers between American democracy and a deep political crisis may be television news and some version of that maddening needle on The New York Times website.

I spoke last week to executives, TV hosts, and election analysts across leading American newsrooms, and I was struck by the blithe confidence among some top managers and hosts, who generally said they’ve handled complicated elections before and can do so again. And I was alarmed by the near panic among some of the people paying the closest attention—the analysts and producers trying, and often failing, to get answers from state election officials about how and when they will count the ballots and report results.

“The nerds are freaking out,” said Brandon Finnigan, the founder of Decision Desk HQ, which delivers election results to media outlets. “I don’t think it’s penetrated enough in the average viewer’s mind that there’s not going to be an election night. The usual razzmatazz of a panel sitting around discussing election results—that’s dead,” he said.

Read the whole thing here.


QUICK HITS

• “Americans can’t agree on whether face masks are a good way to reduce the threat of transmitting COVID-19,” writes J.D. Tuccille. “But we should at least be able to agree that face coverings are a great way to defeat the surveillance stateespecially now that the U.S. government has conceded that masks confuse the hell out of facial recognition technology.”

•  Some smart insights from Jennifer Huddleston, director of technology and innovation policy at the American Action Forum, on last week’s Congressional “antitrust” hearing.

Reason Senior Editor Brian Doherty dissects the political evolution of Peter Thiel.

•  COVID-19 “flare-ups and local lockdowns for the next year or two” are “entirely possible,” said Neel Kashkari, president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank.

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Partial Pseudonymity of an Appellate Decision

I wonder what people think about this: M.M. v. M.S. is a nonprecedential California appellate decision from last Wednesday, involving a lawsuit about alleged invasion of privacy in medical records. (My sense from my quick research is that the medical record was a medical marijuana card.)

Now keeping a case fully pseudonymous, with the parties name unavailable in the court files, is generally viewed by our legal system as a fairly substantial step, requiring some justification—a mild form of sealing of court documents. I think California courts are more open to this than some other courts, but even so pseudonymity is the exception rather than the rule, even though civil defendants, criminal defendants, and even plaintiffs would often prefer not to have their names appear in court decisions.

But here the pseudonymity seems to be present only in the court’s opinion. The appellate and trial court dockets, which one can find using the case numbers given in the opinion, contain the parties’ full names.

Anyone who really wants to research the case can easily find the names, and can find the local newspaper story from 2017, when the lawsuit was filed. So the public’s interest in being able to monitor what courts are doing seems to be largely unimpaired; but the parties’ privacy is protected—or, if you prefer, it becomes harder for the parties’ future employers, business partners, neighbors, or lovers to learn this information by Googling for the parties’ names.

Should we like this? Dislike it?

Does the existence of the article in the local newspaper affect your analysis? Note that there was no follow-up article about the appellate decision in the local paper; I’m not sure if that’s because the newspaper hasn’t gotten to it yet, doesn’t find the appellate decision as newsworthy as the initial filing, or hasn’t learned about the case.

Note also that the plaintiff appears to have been involved as an officer in a local political organization, and the defendants were a former city councilman and a local political activist.

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Isaias Makes Landfall In Carolinas, Sets Eyes On Mid-Atlantic States 

Isaias Makes Landfall In Carolinas, Sets Eyes On Mid-Atlantic States 

Tyler Durden

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 09:25

Isaias topped sustained winds of about 85 mph Monday, right before making landfall in Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina, around 23:00 ET. The hurricane was downgraded Tuesday morning to a tropical storm, set to unleash torrential rains and high winds across Mid-Atlantic and Northeast states, reported the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

After making landfall in the Carolinas, now inching up the East Coast, and fast approaching Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and New York, Isaias is set to arrive in southern Maryland to the Washington, D.C. area around morning rush hour. 

Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York City are expected to face tropical storm conditions throughout the day on Tuesday. Interstate 95 corridor from Richmond, Virginia, to New York could see wind gusts around 45-65 mph, heavy rains, and elevated flash flooding risks. 

CNN quoted Ross Dickman, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service (NWS) in New York, who said Isaias is expected to be one of the strongest storms seen in the Northeast in years. 

“The wind and flooding impacts from Isaias will be similar to what the city has seen from some of the strongest coastal storms,” such as nor’easters — “but we haven’t seen one this strong in many years,” he said.

PowerOutage.US is reporting 364,026 customers are without power in North Carolina and 77,649 in Virginia. Widespread power outages are expected across the Mid-Atlantic area on Tuesday. 

Tornado watches have been posted for Virginia, Maryland, Deleware, and southern parts of New Jersey.

Tornado threats in New York City could surge later in the day.

The latest European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) suggests the storm will head into the interior Northeast. 

There’s one town in Maryland, called Ellicott City, that is prone to some of the craziest flash flooding in the country. We reported a couple of years ago, a storm wiped out the historic town. Residents spent Monday filling sandbags as they fear another flash flood could be seen Tuesday. 

Another disturbance has been spotted behind Isaias. 

The 2020 Atlantic Hurricane Season has already been off to a busy start. 

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Houston Mayor Orders $250 Fines For People Who Refuse To Wear Masks

Houston Mayor Orders $250 Fines For People Who Refuse To Wear Masks

Tyler Durden

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 09:06

Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News,

Democratic Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner has announced that police will begin issuing citations against people not wearing masks, hitting them with a fine of $250 dollars.

“For months, we have been focusing on education and not citations, but now I am instructing the Houston Police Department to issue the necessary warnings and citations to anyone not wearing a mask in public if they do not meet the criteria for an exemption,” the mayor said Monday at a press briefing.

Police said that the wouldn’t respond to call outs reporting people for not wearing masks, but they would issue the fine if they saw someone not covering up during regular patrols.

Turner asked residents to not “get mad” at police officers, asserting, “It’s all about public health and driving our numbers down.”

As we highlighted yesterday, Dr. Deborah Birx suggested that Americans should wear masks inside their own homes to protect elderly loved ones from coronavirus.

The efficacy of masks is far from the settled science that the mainstream media purports it to be, with the Netherlands refusing to enforce the wearing of masks, while health authorities in Sweden have described them as “pointless.”

Last week, Dr. Anthony Fauci raised the prospect of face coverings becoming even more cumbersome when he suggested Americans may wish to start wearing eye goggles in addition to a mask.

*  *  *

There is a war on free speech. Without your support, my voice will be silenced. Please sign up for the free newsletter here. Donate to me on SubscribeStar here. Support my sponsor – Turbo Force – a supercharged boost of clean energy without the comedown.

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Treasury Yields Are Tumbling Back To Record Lows

Treasury Yields Are Tumbling Back To Record Lows

Tyler Durden

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 09:00

Yesterday’s brief interruption in the demise of yield (driven by rate-locks due to the massive Alphabet issuance), has ended with Treasury yields erasing the entire move and then some.

Source: Bloomberg

Aside from the flash-crash spike lows on March 9th, this is the lowest 10Y yields have been ever…

Source: Bloomberg

And stocks refuse to pay attention…

Source: Bloomberg

Because “Vaccine” or “V-shaped recovery” or “Fed put” or “Washington put” or…

And as yields plunge, negative-yielding debt soars and sends alternative assets higher…

Source: Bloomberg

Trade accordingly.

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In Desperation Panic, Turkey Hikes Lira Overnight Rate To 1,024% To Crush Shorts As Currency Implodes

In Desperation Panic, Turkey Hikes Lira Overnight Rate To 1,024% To Crush Shorts As Currency Implodes

Tyler Durden

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 08:48

One week ago, the Turkish Lira which had flatlined for the better part of a month on what strategists said were an unprecedented array of novel capital controls and bank selling of dollars, suffered a sharp hiccup as local authorities briefly lost control of the currency, with USDJPY spiking briefly from its “pegged” level of 6.85 to as high as 7.00 before instantly reversing.

And while a precarious balance had returned in the subsequent few days, the lira resumed its gradual drift lower in what many saw an ominous deja vu of what happened in the summer of 2018 when the lira plunged only to see the central bank hike funding costs in an attempt to crush shorts.

Sure enough, with Turkey ostensibly running out of reserves to sell and keep the TRY quasi pegged, overnight Turkey resorted to the currency bazooka when it unexpectedly ramped up the interest rate on Turkish lira overnight swap transactions in the London market, which initially soared to 280% on Tuesday from 6.8% on July 29, according to Refinitiv data, before exploding as high as 1024bps, the highest on record.

Turkish banks have previously cut funding to the London swap market, effectively making it impossible to short the lira, in order to curb falls in the currency. Today’s desperation move follows heavy dollar sales by state banks last week, which drained lira liquidity as the trades settle, Bloomberg said citing two traders.

Needless to say, for Turkey to resort to such draconian “Plan Z” measures where it effectively nationalizes the FX market, it means that its economy is on the verge of collapse, a view reaffirmed overnight by the FT which writes that Turkey’s tourism sector – a key source of economic growth – continues to reel due to convid.

At this time of year, Murat Tugay, who runs the 240-room Hotel Aqua in the Mediterranean resort of Marmaris, should be dealing with a packed guestbook and all the challenges of peak season. Instead, the hotel is closed and Mr Tugay is banking on a late summer recovery. “We still have August. We still have September,” he says.

This implosion in Turkey’s tourism sector comes at a time when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been desperately seeking to assure the population (and much needed foreign investors) that all is well, hailing a sharp fall in interest rates and praised measures taken to block “malicious” attacks on the Turkish lira. Such steps, he said, were “strengthening the immune system of our economy against global turbulence.”

That could not be further from how most economists see the Turkish picture. The collapse in tourism as a result of the coronavirus pandemic has left a gaping hole in the country’s finances. Foreign investors have fled, pulling out a large volume of funds from the country’s local-currency bonds and stocks over the past 12 months.

In the face of those outflows, the country has burnt through tens of billions of dollars of reserves this year in a bid to maintain an unofficial currency peg — a move that marks a rupture with a two-decade policy of allowing a free float. But, in a sign that those efforts are floundering, as we showed last week, the lira lurched towards a record low against the dollar even as authorities spent billions trying to defend it.

And now, it appears that Turkey is running out of reserves to sell and “control” the lira, and instead it is resorting to the bazooka approach, one which it can use to nuke the occasional short here and there, but which in the longer run will cripple the Turkish economy, and merely accelerate its downfall.

And sure enough, after the lira briefly strengthened in the spot market as a result of record surge in overnight rates, it then promptly swung to a loss again suggesting that it is no longer shorts that are in the driver’s seat, that Turkey’s paniced attempt to punish them will have little impact on the continued decline in the currency, and that a full blown currency crisis in Turkey may be about to hit.

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BP Slashes Dividend For First Time In Decade On Dismal Energy Demand Outlook

BP Slashes Dividend For First Time In Decade On Dismal Energy Demand Outlook

Tyler Durden

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 08:31

BP halved its dividend on Tuesday after reporting a record $6.7 billion quarterly loss due to the collapse in global demand for energy products. 

The dividend cut by BP comes at no surprise. Major oil companies were crushed in the second quarter as coronavirus lockdowns led to a sharp decline in demand for oil and gas products. Royal Dutch Shell is a major oil and gas company that recently announced a cut to its dividend.  

BP said the outlook for energy demand and prices remains “challenging and uncertain,” warning that the virus-induced global recession could weigh on demand for a “sustained period.” As to how long, well, no specific guidance was given. We noted last month, KPMG estimates 14 million fewer vehicles on US highways due to remote working trends and permanent job loss. 

Tuesday’s halving of the dividend (first cut in a decade) to 5.25 cents per share was much larger than what analysts expected, due primarily to the company needing to get its massive debt load under control while adapting to a new environment, one which demand languishes as the global economic recovery is sluggish. 

h/t Reuters 

The company announced in June it would lay off nearly 10,000 workers globally by the end of the year. 

Refinitiv data shows BP’s 2Q loss was one for the record books, posting a $6.7 billion loss for the quarter. The net loss was mostly in line with average analysts’ expectations. The loss is compared with profits of $2.8 billion a year earlier and $791 million in 1Q20.

h/t Reuters 

BP’s new Chief Executive Bernard Looney called the second quarter “challenging:”

“These headline results have been driven by another very challenging quarter, but also by the deliberate steps we have taken as we continue to reimagine energy and reinvent bp. In particular, our reset of long-term price assumptions and the related impairment and exploration write-off charges had a major impact. Beneath these, however, our performance remained resilient, with good cash flow and – most importantly – safe and reliable operations.”

Despite BP’s reduction in its dividend, shares trading in London and New York were higher on Tuesday morning as it announced a new strategy to pivot away from carbon-intensive fossil fuels to a greener initiative. 

BP PLC 

MSCI World Index versus Reuters Global Energy Index 

Maybe the divergence above suggests global stocks are running on fumes. 

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What’s the Best Way To Protect Free Speech? Ken White and Greg Lukianoff Debate Cancel Culture

Milo Yiannopoulos

Even as debates over cancel culture have swept the nation, free speech defenders have disagreed about what, exactly, cancel culture is, and what it means for freedom of speech. In many ways, these disagreements represent differences of opinion about how best to protect and uphold true freedom of speech. 

And what better way to deal with questions about free speech than with a debate? Ken White is an attorney, a co-host of All the President’s Lawyers, and a frequent commenter on issues of speech and law. Greg Lukianoff is the president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), a nonprofit whose mission is to “defend and sustain the individual rights of students and faculty members at America’s colleges and universities.” In the following exchange, the pair debate the resolution: Free speech law is the best defense against cancel culture.

PRO

Ken White: Protect Free Speech Norms With Free Speech Rights 

This is a golden age for free speech in America.

For more than a generation, the United States Supreme Court has reliably protected unpopular speech from government sanction. The Court’s staunch defense of the First Amendment is remarkable because it has transcended political partisanship and upheld speech that offends everyone, including the powerful. 

In overturning flag burning laws, the Court protected (literally) incendiary speech that remains intolerable to many Americans. Years later, in upholding the right of Westboro Baptist Church to picket the funerals of servicemen with vile homophobic insults, the Court aggrieved both the left and the right, permitting violation of norms of veneration of the military and against hate speech. The Court has protected scatological and humiliating ridicule of public figures and overturned laws purporting to bar “disparaging” or “immoral or scandalous” trademarks, firmly establishing that offensive speech is free speech. 

Crucially, the Court has repeatedly rebuked demands that it create new First Amendment exceptions based on the tastes of the moment. Instead, it has adhered to a select, narrowly defined list of historical exceptions, rejecting efforts to create a general “balancing test” that would determine whether speech is protected by an ad hoc weighing of its value and harm. The Court’s defense of free speech is not perfect—students and public employees have seen some narrowing of rights—but it is unprecedented in American history, and in sharp contrast to the Court’s halfhearted defense of Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment rights.  

Moreover, Congress—typically not a reliable defender of rights—has contributed meaningfully to our freedom to speak without fear of legal retaliation. For decades, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 has made online discourse feasible by protecting websites from lawsuits based on the speech of visiting commenters and users. The SPEECH Act, enacted in 2010, protects us from libel tourism by making foreign defamation judgments unenforceable in the United States unless they comply with our robust free speech protections

Of course, rights are enforced by courts, which can make them more theoretical than actual. Access to justice is inconsistent, and the litigation process is hideously expensive and burdensome. But we’ve witnessed an explosion of First Amendment advocacy groups from every part of the political spectrum willing to vindicate Americans’ rights—including the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.  

Yet gloom and despair dominate public discourse about free speech. We’re told that free speech is in decline, under siege, subjected to constant threats. 

It’s true that the First Amendment is constantly under attack and requires ongoing protection from legal assault from all sides. But the prevailing narrative isn’t about official threats to speech—that is, threats involving state action that would violate the First Amendment. Instead, we’re consumed with a debate about free speech culture—a disagreement about whether some speech is impermissibly threatened by other speech. That’s “cancel culture”: the notion that some people’s exercise of their rights to free speech and free association impedes others in exercising those rights. It’s a clash of norms, not of laws.

The notion that free speech norms impact free speech rights is not new. The legal system won’t reliably protect rights unless the culture values them. Consider how our unreflective “law and order” culture has degraded Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment rights. Judge Billings Learned Hand articulated it perfectly in his “Spirit of Liberty” speech in 1944: “Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it; no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it. While it lies there, it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it.” The project of cultivating a cultural respect for free speech is completely legitimate.

How do we protect free speech norms? With our free speech rights, grounded in the rule of law. Cancel culture and denunciation of cancel culture are competing norms in the protected marketplace of ideas. You can’t burn down the marketplace in order to save it. Efforts to use state force to tamper with the marketplace to sort “valid” criticism from “invalid” cancellation inevitably result in less free speech, not more. 

Consider ongoing efforts to use punitive laws to stop the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel, which put a government thumb on the scales by declaring that some forms of free speech and free association are an impermissible way to protest. Or consider how quickly J.K. Rowling, a very wealthy person who styles herself a victim of cancel culture because of the reactions to her comments about transgender people, uses threats of legal action under the U.K.’s regrettable defamation laws to force retractions and apologies from critics, nominally in service of some right to speak without “unfair” criticism. You can’t win real free speech with censorship.

So what does it mean to use legal norms to protect cultural norms?

The law matters.

It’s common for people criticizing cancel culture to say “we’re not talking about law, we’re talking about culture and behavior.” Sure. But knowledge is power, and ignorance is poisonous. 

Dialogue about free speech—including about free speech culture—is often shot through with misunderstandings and disinformation about our legal rights. For instance, the debate over how social media platforms should be moderating unpopular speech is dominated by propaganda and gibberish about Section 230. That’s bad for culture and civic society, because you can’t effectively rely on or defend a right you don’t understand. 

Debates about free speech need not be limited to the law, but they should not mislead about the law. For example, when FIRE criticizes private universities for censorious policies, they take pains to point out that private schools are not bound by the First Amendment but should be bound by their promises of free exchange of ideas. That approach combines robust discourse about culture with accurate information about rights.

“The culture of free speech” is political; act accordingly.

Many people who are concerned with cancel culture are acting in good faith and not trying to push a political agenda. But some people are. Cancel culture —like any somewhat useful descriptive term—is cynically used to mean “things I don’t like” and “liberals suck.” Take our president:

The problem isn’t just that this reflects a completely unprincipled definition of cancel culture. The bigger problem is that the president (and many other politicians) decry cancel culture while wallowing in it by seeking to inflict social and economic consequences against speakers they don’t like.

In fact, I respectfully submit that most complaining about cancel culture is insincere griping meant to convey “liberals are bad.” This is part of a general political effort to associate free speech with the right and censorship with the left. (That effort isn’t just historically laughable and demonstrably untrue, it’s terribly shortsighted and counterproductive if your goal is to sell young people on free speech culture.) As a result, when people of good faith, like my friend Greg Lukianoff, talk about cancel culture, they’re viewed with skepticism. They cannot pretend that their arguments exist in a vacuum; they exist in a culture of relentless, unprincipled misuse of the phrase. 

So what can they do? They can use the rigor you would associate with legal norms. They can explain their terms, debate principled definitions of what is objectionable, and call out political misuse of the concept, so that their discourse can’t be mistaken for mere partisanship. That brings us to the next way legal norms can inform this debate: 

Specifics are better than generalities.

The debate over cancel culture is best conducted using specific examples, as you would in a legal argument, not broad generalities. 

There is, for instance, a fairly broad consensus that the firing of David Shor was unjust and contemptible. So why not say so explicitly? The now-famous Harper’s magazine letter about cancel culture didn’t. It relied, instead, on somewhat vague allusions to cases, and on general criticism of “intolerance of opposing views” and “a vogue for public shaming and ostracism”––terms that are very susceptible to exactly the sort of cynical political misuse I’m talking about. It should not have shocked the authors that their audience, steeped in our current political culture, read it as a partisan wolf in principled sheep’s clothing. Couching the debate in specific cases, like Shor’s, will help as much as rigorous definitions. 

Take competing rights seriously.

The point of the law is to sort out competing claims of rights. Any debate over cancel culture must do so as well. The things decried as “cancellation” of free speech—public denunciations, calls for firings and boycotts, and so forth—are indisputably other people’s free speech. Just as a legal argument won’t persuade if it ignores the claims of the opposing party (well, unless it’s a D.A. arguing), the cultural argument won’t persuade if it amounts to shut up so I feel more comfortable talking. 

This is particularly true because cancel culture is used so flexibly to mean anything from demanding that someone be fired for saying something offensive (which might be a principled definition) to criticizing that person for saying it because doing so might be “mob action” that contributes to cancellation. Everyone’s free speech rights are equal before the law. “There’s no right not to be offended” is indisputably true, but so is “there’s no right not to be criticized.” These rights should be equal philosophically, too. People arguing that cancel culture is bad need to confront the fact that boycotts, group public condemnation, and even demands for firing are the sort of speech that comparatively obscure and powerless people have available to them. 

And finally, in legal advice I always give to clients:

Don’t fall for grifters.

Like any Very Online debate, cancel culture is a bright flame attracting huckster moths, eager to gather money and attention by portraying themselves as its victims—just subscribe here to learn all about it! Exercise prudent skepticism.

Debating free speech values is good. A little legal rigor wouldn’t hurt.

CON

Greg Lukianoff: Free Speech Culture Is Our Best Hope Against Cancel Culture 

Free speech culture is more important than the First Amendment. It’s more important because free speech culture is what gave us the First Amendment in the 18th century. It’s what kept free speech alive in the 19th century. It’s what reinvigorated the First Amendment in the 20th century. It’s what informs the First Amendment today—and it is what will decide if our current free speech protections will survive into the future.

The thinking that culture can be separated from the law is an odd sociological, let alone legal, theory, especially in a common law country. Indeed, the most important book in the history of freedom of speech, John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty, is primarily a philosophical, not legal, argument against a repressive/conformist culture. The same is true of the most important book on freedom of speech in the last 50 years, Jonathan Rauch’s Kindly Inquisitors. And the greatest speech on the nature of a free society, Judge Billings Learned Hand’s 1944 “Spirit of Liberty” speech, explicitly argues that culture trumps law: “I often wonder whether we do not rest our hopes too much upon constitutions, upon laws and upon courts,” he said. “These are false hopes; believe me, these are false hopes. Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it. While it lies there it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it.”

Indeed, the framers of the Constitution and the First Amendment itself were heavily influenced by the cultural norms of the mother country and by radical free speech advocates like John Lilburne. They also benefited from free thinkers like Montesquieu, Francis Bacon, John Locke, David Hume, and the colonial experience in which the press and individual free speech was essentially impossible to control. The Bill of Rights in many ways is a summary of cultural values of what had previously been called “free-born Englishmen.” 

Popular Idioms and Free Speech Culture

What does free speech culture look like? Popular idioms—like “it’s a free country”—are one good window into cultural values, and free speech values are not absent from our idioms. The folk wisdom of “to each his own,” and “everyone’s entitled to their own opinion” can be found all over First Amendment law and is mirrored in quotes, including my favorite in West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette (1943): “Freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much.”

The sentiments “different strokes for different folks” and “who am I to judge?” find their legal analogs in cases including Cohen v. California‘s great line—”one man’s vulgarity is another’s lyric”—from 1971.

Notice, many idioms that were common when many of us were younger just don’t have the same cultural force they used to have. Indeed, “sticks and stones” is regularly made fun of and misrepresented as being an incorrect folk notion rather than a mantra a free society teaches its children to help them deal with the burdens of everyday life. Free speech culture is a culture with a high tolerance for difference; a general presumption that, for most of us, our personal political opinions don’t matter all that much for our day-to-day lives: “To each his own.”

Free speech culture started to decline on college campuses in the mid-1980s, when campuses—whether they knew it or not—started adopting the idea of “repressive tolerance.” This was the belief that free speech protection for minority opinions did not go far enough. Instead, campus authorities should censor hateful speech. Of course, on campus, their political ideology was entirely dominant, giving them a skewed view of the importance of free speech for minority opinions in the off-campus world.

Luckily, lawyers and judges largely educated before the rise of repressive tolerance norms continued to zealously protect it. However, we kid ourselves if we believe our legal freedoms will survive if our free speech culture is undermined by the institutions entrusted to educate future citizens, leaders, lawyers, and judges.

The Necessary Differences Between Culture and Law  

The idea of free speech culture will always be frustrating to lawyers because it doesn’t have the specificity of law. Of course, free speech law is more specific than free speech culture; law is about rules, while culture is about norms. That free speech culture is less specific than law does not make it less powerful. As Charles Davenant had mythological King Thoas observe in 1677’s Circe, there is great power in “Custom, that unwritten Law, By which the People keep, even Kings in awe.” 

Oddly, some lawyers think of the law as something barely influenced by culture. But what about, for example, gay marriage? It only became legal after the culture accepted its legitimacy—an unthinkable development 50 years ago.

What does free speech culture look like? Free speech culture means high tolerance for difference. It means a general presumption that, for most of us, our personal political opinions don’t matter all that much for our day-to-day jobs: That those with “terrible” opinions can still be amazing lawyers, artists, scientists, and accountants, and people with “good” opinions are not necessarily good at anything—indeed, they might be a little too conventional to contribute interesting things to art, science, or social innovation. 

The idea that bad people can be beneficial to society, and good people might be useless, is something that seems heretical in the context of cancel culture, which deems nasty things said in tweets 10 years ago relevant. 

Cancel Culture Is Unchecked Instinct. Free Speech Culture Must Be Learned.

Cancel culture comes from our natural instinct to silence dissent. The desire for compliance and conformity is reflected in most of human history. It’s deeply ingrained in all of us. We did not have to learn to censor others, we had to learn to be tolerant of nonconformity. We had to learn not to burn the heretic.

Cancel culture is a useful term for delineating the social media era expression of the ancient desire for conformity. Pervasive social media means that things that might have previously been ignored––angry letters sent to The New York Times––are now potentially successful efforts to mobilize a sufficient number of people to ruin lives. Early attempts to describe the new phenomena are instructive, including my own short book Freedom From Speech (2014), the documentary Can We Take a Joke? (2015), and Jon Ronson’s So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed (2015).

So how would I define cancel culture? Broadly and tentatively, of course. How about: 

“Cancel culture” is a term to refer to a relatively recent (post-2013) uptick in—and success of—ideologically driven efforts to get individuals fired or otherwise cast out of acceptable society for non-conforming speech or actions, including speech that would have once been considered trivial, private, or unrelated to someone’s job. It is tightly related to the rise in social media, which allows for unparalleled collective policing of ideological norms, and the comparative ease of creating online “outrage mobs.” 

Cancel culture is in my view, the progeny of campus “callout culture” that Jonathan Haidt and I explore in our book The Coddling of the American Mind (2019). Some characteristics of campus callout culture looks similar to cancel culture, including: 1) the conflation of expressions of opinion with physical violence, 2) the use of ad hominem rhetorical tactics which delegitimize the person and soften or ignore the substance of the argument), 3) the elimination of concern for the intent of targeted speech, relying solely on its claimed effect, 4) a high reliance on guilt by association and theories of “moral pollution” (a concept well explained by my colleague Pamela Paresky), and 5) appeals to authority to punish or remove the targeted speaker (also known as moral dependency). None of these criteria are required to be part of cancel culture, but some or all of these characteristics often are. 

Cancel culture often relies on speech that is already unprotected under First Amendment law, including threats of bodily harm and outright harassment. In other cases, cancel culture demands behavior from others that would be unconstitutional or otherwise unlawful. While, for example, you’re absolutely free to advocate for less free speech by, for example, demanding a professor be fired for their expression, if a public university were to act on those demands it would violate the law, plain and simple. 

The forces of conformity are very strong in humans, and we’ve given them superpowers in recent days. It must be opposed. Diversity of opinion, the right to individual conscience, the power of thought experimentation and devil’s advocacy are important for a free and innovative society.

Free Speech Culture Without Free Speech Law vs. Free Speech Law Without Free Speech Culture

What does a culture look like that has a strong free speech culture, but not favorable law? France in the 18th century is a good example. It was one of the greatest philosophical periods in human history. It featured thinkers like Voltaire, Diderot, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Émilie du Châtelet, as well as salons, like those of Baron d’Holbach, attended by thinkers like David Hume, Adam Smith, and Benjamin Franklin. Sometimes these thinkers and writers had to flee France to avoid arrest, and sometimes they were arrested, but the cultural norm of open discussion was so strong they kept writing and innovating and challenging norms and beliefs.

And what does a country look like that has no free speech culture, but good free speech law? Consider the following guarantees of free speech, from other countries’ constitutions: 

  • “Everyone shall be guaranteed freedom of thought and speech…”
  • “Citizens are guaranteed freedom of speech, the press, assembly, demonstration and association.”
  • “Everyone has the right to express and disseminate his/her thoughts and opinions by speech, in writing or in pictures or through other media, individually or collectively.”

Each of these sounds similar to our own First Amendment’s speech promise. And if you want to know how they are working out, you can visit Russia, North Korea, and Turkey, respectively. 

And while these are stark examples, free speech is even under threat in the nominally “free world,” including in Spain, Britain, and France, where people have been imprisoned for rap lyrics saying the wrong thing, reading the wrong thing, or having the wrong reaction in a Facebook post. 

That’s where we could be headed if we don’t remember that free speech culture is more important than free speech law. A free speech culture can exist without protective law, but not the other way around—at least not for very long.

Ken White Responds

True Free Speech Defenders Must Resist Making Free Speech a Partisan Issue 

My friend Greg Lukianoff is passionate about free speech, as befits someone who has fought so effectively for it. We have few legal disputes about the scope of the First Amendment. Moreover, as a matter of taste, our views about cancel culture are often consistent—I, too, think that demands that people suffer economic consequences for disfavored speech are often counterproductive and destructive to civic society. But my view of the current public dialogue about free speech culture is substantially more cynical than his, and there we differ. 

Greg asserts that free speech culture “gave us the First Amendment in the 18th century” and “kept free speech alive.” That culture has always been more aspirational than actual. The free speech culture that produced the First Amendment also promptly produced the Alien and Sedition Acts. The dawn of the modern age and mass media gave us broad justifications for censorship of political speech, cultural repression, and suppression of minority views and values

Though Americans support free speech in the abstract, that support often breaks down when we are confronted with specific examples of speech we don’t like. The history of the First Amendment is a history of Americans struggling mightily against other Americans trying to silence them. If free speech is in our national DNA, so is censorship.

That’s a fundamental flaw in the current popular cancel culture narrative. It suggests, expressly or implicitly, that America enjoyed some golden age of cultural tolerance for speech. But did we? Did we really? If so, when was it? I submit that there was never such an age, and that unpopular views have always met with social and economic repercussions in America. 

We can strive to do better, but we shouldn’t distort history by claiming that people now are more censorious than they were before. We can argue, for instance, that Americans should be able to express disapproval of gay marriage without losing their jobs—but that shouldn’t lead us to suggest that America was previously a safe place to express pro-gay views, when it manifestly was not

Why does this matter? It matters because the loudest voices condemning cancel culture in America are not people of good faith like Greg. The loudest voices are using the issue as a cynical political wedge from the right to attack the left

They’re the same voices who try to get people fired for speech when that speech is offensive to them, when that speech comes from the left. The “golden era” concept—the suggestion that there was a better time for social tolerance of speech in America, and it’s now been spoiled by millennials and progressives—is not just wrong, it’s nakedly partisan, and it’s part of the same effort to make free speech culture into a political weapon.   

Making free speech a partisan issue is foolhardy, and true free speech defenders must resist it. The First Amendment—and free speech culture more broadly—rely on a sometimes tenuous bargain. The bargain is this: We all agree not to use the power of the state to punish speech that makes us mad, and instead to use the power of the marketplace of ideas to fight it. That deal convinces Americans to refrain, at least some of the time, from state censorship of some truly despicable and upsetting speech

But what if we now tell Americans that yes, they have the marketplace of ideas, they have the ability to respond to speech they hate with “more speech”—but that more speech shouldn’t be too harsh? What if we tell them—and especially young people, who tend to be far more left-leaning—that we should see harsh responses to ugly speech as “liberal” and mild responses as “conservative”? Their natural reaction may be to see the free speech “deal” as a partisan sham, a rationalization for preferring the speech and feelings of one group over the other. It’s hard to imagine a better way to lose an entire generation’s commitment to free speech values.

To be taken seriously, cancel culture critiques must be doggedly nonpartisan and overtly hostile to political misuse. They must also strive for evenhandedness. Critics shouldn’t impose norms on “more speech” that they don’t impose on the speech it’s rebutting. 

So, for instance, if you’re concerned that widespread condemnation of a professor’s column chills speech, you might ask at the same time whether the professor’s description of student activists as a “terrorist organization” was also chilling. More speech is free speech, entitled to the same legal and cultural protection as the speech to which it responds. A philosophy that criticizes one to the exclusion of the other will not convince Americans.

Greg Lukianoff Responds

Free Speech Culture Is What Makes Free Speech Law Possible

Ken White and I are both great admirers of American First Amendment law. I believe it’s the best body of thought on how to have freedom of speech in the real world. Where Ken and I differ is that I believe free speech culture and law are (almost) inextricable. We interpret law through the lens of culture, and culture is what makes our law possible and effective. The list of countries that have good free speech laws on the books, but have no free speech because they utterly lack a free speech culture, is long.

We are extremely lucky that our Supreme Court is populated by attorneys educated or coming up during the 1970s, arguably the best decade for both free speech culture on campus and free speech law. However, I’ve seen a stark decline in student respect for, or understanding of, speech norms over the past decade, and I believe this will inevitably lead to an eventual decline in law. 

As I’ve recounted countless times, from 2001 to about 2012, the students were the best constituency for free speech on campus. Then, in the 2013–14 school year, students started to demand new campus speech codes and disinvitations, claiming that the presence of people with certain views was medically harmful. Conservatives had railed against campus narrow mindedness for years, but starting in 2014, more and more liberals and left-of-center people grew concerned about the trend, as well. As researchers would discover, the population hitting campuses around 2013–2014 were less tolerant of free speech.  

Because the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education works exclusively on campus, I saw this change in real time and on the ground—both figuratively and literally. In 2015, I filmed Nicholas Christakis when he was encircled by Yale students calling for him to lose his job. 

As more members of Generation Z hit the “real world,” free speech norms like tolerance for political differences will erode. A 2020 Cato/YouGov survey found that 27 percent of Americans under 30 would support firing a business executive who personally donates to Joe Biden’s campaign; 44 percent support firing a similar Donald Trump donor. 

Ken warned me about grifters, charlatans, and Trump tainting my argument. But this is the kind of guilt-by-association argument I am fighting: “Bad people make argument, therefore argument bad!” Never mind that I was speaking about this phenomenon years before anyone imagined a President Trump. Yes, Trump pointed out a rising intolerance on the left, but former President Barack Obama has also made similar arguments several times over, and continues to do so. 

So have former presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

Ken is a friend who I love, admire, and respect, but I have to vent some frustration. I’ve seen a lot of hostility to the idea of free speech culture coming from people who defer to Ken’s point of view. If Ken is concerned about free speech cynicism, he’s fortuitously positioned to help stop it. 

So, I have some requests of Ken, but, more importantly, of his fans, and for many others.

Please don’t be so quick to call people hypocrites.

Not everybody who cares about freedom of speech is as well-versed in its nuances as Ken and me. I try to give people the benefit of the doubt, and even expect people to be inconsistent, because that’s part of human nature. Sometimes free speech defenders can disagree about what should be protected, may still be learning, or just made a bad call once. If the price of chiming in to say “I believe in free speech” is to be called out as a presumptive hypocrite, why wouldn’t people become cynical?

Welcome even temporary allies.

If someone usually disagrees with you, but actually agrees with you on a particular free speech incident, welcome their help rather than fixate on what you consider to be their previous hypocrisy (which sometimes isn’t even there).

Stop lumping actual free speech advocates together with the predictable partisan pundits.

Jonathan Rauch, Nadine Strossen, and I and many others are people who actually work in this profession; Milo Yiannopoulos and Charlie Kirk, for example, are explicitly partisan and only care about free speech for ideological allies. In my experience, speech professionals are thoughtful and consistent, and should not be dragged down because grifters exist, as they have always existed. 

Do this first: Ask “how can I help this student or professor who is in trouble for his expression?”

Many people follow Ken’s example by tweeting something about how people on the right “don’t care about these cases—in your face, conservative!” But few realize what else he does: Send the cases our way and actually support our work. Be more like Ken and do more than dunk on your opponents: Spread the word, contact the school, and urge other influential people to join the pro–free speech side. 

Ken and I don’t have to agree on the value of free speech culture. But when people are fostering contempt and cynicism about free speech it makes the job of actual free speech fighters, including both Ken and me, much harder. If we preoccupy ourselves with distancing ourselves from the “bad” folks, we will eventually cede free speech to the grifters. 

It’s okay that people deemed “bad” by internet mobs agree with me about cancel culture. Indeed, I would like more people to come out against cancel culture; most Americans are against it but may be afraid to say so. I may be greedy, but I’d like both strong free speech law and a strong culture. 

Therefore, I would like more people to return to the idioms of a free society: How about “everyone’s entitled to their own opinion,” “it’s a free country,” “address the argument, not the person,” and maybe a new one: “Even people I hate have to make a living.”

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Lex Loci Delicti, not Praetor Peregrinus

From Judge David Oblon’s last week in Mireskandari v. Daily Mail & General Trust PLC:

In this defamation case, a United Kingdom … news publication allegedly defamed a UK [lawyer] practicing in the UK at a UK law firm, involving actions that occurred in the UK, through news stories of parochial interest to UK readers, to gain favor with UK police. The distilled question before the Court is, why is this case in Fairfax, Virginia, USA? The legal question is, can the Court properly exercise personal jurisdiction over the UK Defendants under Virginia’s Long Arm Statute and the Due Process Clause of the United Stales Constitution?

[No, says the court, for various reasons, and adds:]

Fairfax County, Virginia, USA, Is Not The World’s Defamation Court.

Some may have misread the Johnny Depp v. Amber Heard Opinion Letter, wherein another judge of this Court held Virginia was the proper forum for actor Johnny Depp’s defamation suit against his ex-wife, actress Amber Heard, despite the seemingly thin connection of the parties and the cause of action to Virginia.

For starters, the issue in Depp was of forum non conveniens and venue—not in personam jurisdiction. Nevertheless, any jurisdictional or locational ruling in Depp expressed a limiting principle, not an expansive invitation to forum shop in Fairfax County. The Court held under the lex loci delicti rule that the cause of action in a defamation case arises where the last act for publishing the allegedly defamatory statement took place. In Depp, the last act was when The Washington Post uploaded the statement in an article to the Internet from servers located in Virginia. Stated differently, Depp stands for the principle that Virginia is one of the few places where that defamation action may be adjudicated.

The logical extension of Depp is that the Daily Mail case may be brought where the last link of the publication of the defamatory statements occurred. If that last link was in Virginia, Mr. Mireskandari has not realistically pled that. Merely being accessible is not synonymous with where something is published. Although in paragraph 14, Plaintiff avers Daily Mail “published” the defamatory articles in Virginia, that statement is belied by the rest of the Amended Complaint. Defendants are UK companies operating a UK news publication. And even assuming the place of publication is where the article was first uploaded onto a server, Mr. Mireskandari has not pled that Virginia was the place….

The only real similarity between Depp and this case is that Virginians sitting in Virginia can access both The Washington Post and Daily Mail online. The differences are remarkable: The Washington Post is a US company with offices in Virginia, is printed in Virginia, and its digital platform is created and routed through servers in Virginia. Conversely, Daily Mail is a UK company and has the “‘.co.uk” web address of UK domains. Unlike in Depp where the alleged defamatory op-ed was first printed and/or uploaded in Virginia, Mr. Mireskandari has not alleged the Daily Mail’s alleged defamatory article was first published in Virginia, as opposed to elsewhere, such as the UK….

The Circuit Court of Fairfax does not sit as praetor peregrinus. {In ancient Rome, a praetor was a judicial officer, who generally handled matters of equity. A praetor urbanus was an arbiter over disputes between citizens; a praetor peregrinus handled suits in which one or both parties were foreigners.} Daily Mail’s Motion to Dismiss is granted….

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